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Show 0 UTAH LABOR NEWS. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. APRIL 2 3, 1937. C. POLITICAL OUTLOOK I Ot Organizes Tooele Tunnel Day Celebration Set Provo Steel Plant (Continued from Page l) I I federation president's picture on a reason for it. Your observer could say more, its front page in nearly every isin but this Is enough for this time. sue, has the following excuse Mr B. He may have something more to 58, by its March issue: S. Utah tell in future issues of the Labor News. Royle, provides for occupationa voting against diseases compensable. becoming TOOELE hrisch- The state federation of labor did Ud la ere planning occupa tunnel day" eaux Lindstrom, Peterson, Stev- - not introduce anything onthat the 1 ronton. af-set the tentative date for the 1 ens,Mrs!tewart, Thornton, and tional diseases, feeling 1 act. such an veto would Governor comand fa,r as Ma h An executive Steel rSnnmv mitte0 was namej as follows: President Maw, Democrats, The Columbia The above excuse is laughable in Griffin .republican, Ironton mill at the face of the fact that the presioperating a steel j3evan Tooele county com- Absent and not and iron mines in Iron caaty mission; Dr. T. M. Aldous, A. W. dent and the secretary-treasure- r Democrat. I Lund, Unitetl the to a on a campaign against the is carried subsidiary Utah, Rhone, Joseph A. Johnson, Robert The senate bill was thus killed. and reelection of the renomination States Steel corporation, .which Remington David n. Charles and A companion bill in the house was Governor. And we all know that recognized the C. I. 0. union as E(, M Kvan, introduced, but it never came up the official monthly circular of the Suggestions have been made tfiat for consideration before that body, federation and the building trades the tunnel be named Elton tunnel Are a Hazard I had a good word council never has in honor of J. 0. Elton, general Industrial diseases in metal min to Governor. I the about During say of the International jng are a greater hazard than are manager ineach the monthly campaign the accidents, and for this reason Smelting company. filled was circular stallment of the for the celebration can- - t was very important that the The Colunbia also operates coal Lot be day at the Governor. set definitely until later as Koyle bill should become a law. On with did not circular tone The of the ifc is Planned to be heId on the day if top of this it was a party measure, have followissues in county. The coal mines nt cor- actual boring into the mouth of the If the Democratic change any party members ing the November election. under I I commences. had any of the legislature The circular gives the managtbe bu?e Bteam shovel concern about their party pledges Amiriri At Present 7 sinre orers is working unceasingly on the cut the bill should have passed by both ing editors title to the 10th vice ?orf to the tunnel portal. The dirt is be- - houses by an almost unanimous president of the state federation, HaDov and the title of. an associate editor The taSce &away ndtSig8 spread Ifor VThe bill was used as a football to the federation president. Po?e Tthe Cdumbif are jXknt of to former the circular started spite tbe track Pur fH and railroad yard for certain labor politicians to win FduoatfoiS where the tracks will be laid, the support of certain industrial the Utah Labor News for refusal SfhS rtU iff The work has (tone on now for employers and the chamber of to support the Republican ticket, at th CXpenM f and for refusal to supportU.Reed ek3 and much dlrt S. Utah has been carried on for some Smoot for reelection to the time. A bundle of the Utah Labor has been removed. woriunj senate in 1932, and for refusing to stand-pa- t Republican canthat Sessions has an excellent Royle bill, the president of the support 1934. The actions of the in didates state federation of labor, politically E. A.T Mitchell of Provo has been I chance to win. to the most known well are latter and spoke A1 Sessions has the endorsement ambitious, appeared work. active missionary in the of Utah last fall. people the measure. distributed Utah Labor of all the central bodies in the 10th against The of chairman the state indusYour observer was informed News and other union literature I California district, of the Railroad been the feacommission has trial BPotherhood.s7the' Epics, the Com-- 1 that the bill was traded by state) among the men. Jknows whois I of circular ever tured favorite the federation politicians for the who among the steel workers in monwealth Federation and others, cal since its must be There inception. the chairman ;of headquarters have Campaign and carried his activities of the industrial state Labor commission. temple among those who were interested I been opened at the r A Poor Showing. in learning about union organiza-- 1 in Bakersfield and needed contnbu-- 1 The circular of the received. monthly are Itions cheerfully tion. state federation, which carries the (Continued from page 1). Ou ploves of the Pacific Iron ripe company located at . City officers, civic M. ( I Those senators S:ILui5., mud-slingi- How They Voted The senators from the intermountain states who voted for the final passage of the Guffey-Viqso- n coal bill, which previously passed the house, and is now a law, are: Thomas of Utah, Hayden of Arizona, Adams and Johnson of Colorado, lope .of Idaho, Murray and Wheeler of Montana, Chavez and Hatch of New Mexico, JlcCarrail and Iittman of Nevada, OMahoney and Schwartz of Wyoming. Borah of Idaho voted against the bill. Ashurst of Arizona, and King of Utah, did not vote. On the Byrnes amendment on strikes the bill to declare illegal, which was defe.ated by a vote of 48 to 36, the senators from states were rethe corded voting as follows: Chavez, Hatch, Nays Borah, Hayden, Johnson, McCarran, OMahoney, Pittman, Pope, Thomas, Schwartz. Yeas Adams, King. Not voting Ashurst, Murray, ng sit-do- inter-mounta- Xh 5!e.AU politi-Ironto- Talk About Loyalty When you talk about loyalty to LABOR ON ITS FORWARD MARCH I SS iZi hnad of 80-ce- Wheeler. On the amendment the nay vote wras favorable to labor. Mussolini may say he doesnt want to control all peoples living in the lands of the old Roman empire but hes probably got his 'ingers crossed. n, Typo Auxiliary Will Entertain organizations, it reminds us Womans Auxiliary No. 16 to William Green, president of the A. become a who has of F. L., Typographical union No. 115 will quietly I entertain Sunday, May 2, at the member of a musicians union. Whoever heard the head of the home of Mrs. J. L. McGhie, 915 A. F. of L. playing an instru-- 1 East Thirteenth South street, In the I ment even a Jews harp ? I celebration of the 28th anniversary I jiost 0f us are 0f the opinion that of its organization. Members of Typographical union given. Bill merely took the card in a Chicago musicians union so that lie No. 115 and Mailers union No. 21 d and their families will be the Adopts Labor Paper may continue to hold his LOS ANGELES (UNS) "Plane in the A. F. of L. in the guests. Dinner will be served from Facts, a weekly published in this I event his own union, the United 3 to 7 p. m. Mrs. M. L. Hamson, Mrs. W. A. city by the United Automobile Mine Workers of America, is ex- Workers of America, has been pelled for the great crime of or-- 1 Parker, Mrs. Zillah Terkes, Mrs. J made the official organ for the ganizing the unorganized workers I W. Caldwell, Mrs. J. F. Rhodes and Mrs. O. W. Wilhelmson will assist! in industries. union on the Pacific coast. John L. Lewis predicted Bills the hostess. It will be the clearing house for all union news in southern I action a year ago when he Dick Coleman, publi-- 1 ly said: Well, being an accom-- j cation director, announced. Thelplished warbler I suppose he (Bill LET FREEDOM auto workers are interested in Green) will join a musicians' RING PROGRAM! union. what goes on in other unions. We have similar loyalty in eviwon recognition Plane Facts As American citizens, we talk! Airdence here in Utah. For fear he about the strike at Douglas during our Bills of Rights and the craft corporation in Santa Monica. might lose his good standing in the Constitution. Just what are those A. F. of L. the president of the Bob Trochet is editor. ? Do we rights really have them Utah State Federation of Labor ? I These are the subjects The teamsters today secured a card Bargain With Union fiePIanQed every Monday His original card was with SPRINGDALE, Pa. (UNS) at over the CBS Two of the most important power the International Union of Mine, rad network. companies of western Pennsyl- Mill and Smelter Workers, a C. I. Patent 26, Monday, April vania have been negotiating with O affiliate be will the subject. What A good union man remarked: lights Local 604 of the United Electric 1tt?rs Pate?ts,l TWbat ar and Radio Workers of America, C. The Utah federation head is qual- I patent mterfenng patents? chauffeur-he raninto I. Cb affiliate. A copy of a con- ified as a . Does any protection a zone Rfnc!ing was safety early last year, tract drawn up by the union and aw to lv submitted to the Duquesne Light arrested, but was not convicted be- - those who doC(WJight privilege Are it? J101 .seK cause of the able manipulation of company a week before the con property rights respected ference began, was the basis of a jafly lawver who now Presses Mlterary in all lands? These are the questhe negotiations with that com- - over the traffic court and soaks tions Monday nights Let Freethem plenty in fines for traffic pany. dom Ring program will explain. Conferences with the West Penn violations. Power company have also been n Trainmen Uphold OPEN FORUM going on for some time.- Both A. CLEVELAND F. Whitney, power houses lie in the Allegheny The participants in the Peoples Valley, where the Committee for president of the Brotherhood of Open Forum at the City and CounIndustrial Organization has union- Railway Trainmen, in a telegram ty building, last Sunday night adI President Roosevelt urged him ized nearly every to meet Sunday, April 25, journed 1SHore attacks against industry of any significance in the I 8 p. m., at the Fraternity hall, j .own strikes, especially the expres- - 32314 South State n The only major street, to hear a of Lowell and other reacsions is 57 the famous Heinz, plant on discussion the subject, Fly in) Bostonians. tionary varieties company. Lowell never condemned law- the Recovery Ointment. less employers who maintain ar- Akrons Big Parade to AKRON, Ohio (UNS) At least labor ffjf aid thu. d.esl lghts 75,000 persons participated in the LABOR on page 5) (Continued to labor held here huge parade .SEE demonstrate solidarity with the WE WELCOME YOU Firestone strikers, who have kept! Fraser & Lennox a picket line going for a number 132 So. State of weeks in an effort to obtain sole Gas Furnaces collective bargaining rights. The Only Stage Show Newspaper reports said that TORRID ZONE in Town Featuring more than 25,000 union men marched to the cheers of 50,000 and EQUATOR Time" sympathizers in the greatest labor Big t Coal Furnaces rally ever witnessed in the history of Akron. Vaudeville (Continued from page 3) a committee from the union negotiated with the management Offers of 53 cents, later raised to 65, were both refused by the com- mittee, which stuck by its demand increase finally for the I I in nt pie-car- y mass-producti- on a, joking-Californi- j There will begin soon in the Utah Labor News an copyrighted, a dra-unio- n. Sit-Dow- - - mass-producti- on sit-valle- y. non-unio- z: R 0 Butler Stokers Sessions for Congress All BAKERSFIELD Cal. Sessions, editor and labor leader, is being boosted for congress in the special election which is to be held here on May 4. Failing to qualify for the ballot because of a short- age of signatures, his campaign committee is engaged in a strenuous write-i- n drive. It is believed X Acts and Y Two Feature Pictures Amateur Night Every Tuesday Night y AMERICAN DISTRIBUTING CO. 62 E. 4th So. Was. 6926 Wholesale Retal Terms to Suit Free Estimates story in serial form. book-lengt- h Little Tim and His Experience With Good, Bad and Indifferent People The first installment of Little Tim will appear in the Utah Labor News before its appearance in book form. When published as a book, Little Tim will sell for $2 per In this paper you will read it without extra charge. The regular subscription price of the Utah Labor News is $1.50 a year. Besides Little Tim, you will get the benefit of all other features appearing in this paper. The story is written by an author who knows his subject; knows how to write a story to make it readable and interesting. Little Tim is a stirring, true-to-listory of the American worker and farmer. It is a history of their trials and tribulations, and of their forward march in the past 50 years. The story begins in the north woods and its lumber camps among the exploited lumber Jacks. It takes the reader through the great wheat fields of the Dakotas, Kansas and Oklahoma; through the iron mines, the ore docks of the Great Lakes, and the steel mills of Pennsylvania. copy. fe Little Tim has experience in the southern cotton fields and mills. He is called an agitator in the copper mining camps of Arizona. The story tells of Litle Tims experience in the Carbon county, Utah, coal mines, before and after they were unionized. Little Tim has experiences with jealous labor leaders and rival labor organizations. The story bares the hypocrisy of politicians, and rottenness of political party bosses. Ever fighting for democracy and against dictatorshio in industry, politics, and labor unions. Little Tim meets with obstacles and is overcome temporarily by defeats, to rise to fight until at last he sees a day of victory for the idealsagain and principles he has upheld, fought for nd suffered for during his years of activity in behalf of humanity. Do not miss the opening chapter. 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